• Categories
Collapse

The Silver Fern

Wales v Australia

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Rugby Matches
walesaustralia
203 Posts 41 Posters 7.5k Views
Wales v Australia
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #191

    @booboo said in Wales v Australia:

    @tordah said in Wales v Australia:

    @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
    In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
    The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

    Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

    You would hope 100 out 100 would not penalise.

    There is no "negative intent". Stopping a pass legally is a very positive result for Wales.

    I think their is a bit of confusion here. IMO it was a negative action but tat was solely because he didn't look to be trying to knock it back,it was just fortuitous that he did. He was just sticking out a hand to stop the pass and it worked out.

    G 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    replied to barbarian on last edited by
    #192

    @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

    Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

    I saw what you saw by the sound of it - the defence splintered went around the back of the maul and then tackled the ball carrier while grotesquely offside.

    yet the ref just waved it on. Weird.

    G 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • voodooV Offline
    voodooV Offline
    voodoo
    replied to barbarian on last edited by
    #193

    @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

    @voodoo But the splintering is caused by Fainga'a being pulled back from behind by a Wales player at 7seconds. The player wasn't bound to the maul before doing this, IMO.

    Maybe, but my point was more that even despite that, you should have received a penalty (or at minimum a scrum) from the next action - certainly shouldn't have been a turnover!

    So in summary, yes, your rage was entitled!

    barbarianB 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • G Offline
    G Offline
    gibbon rib
    replied to nzzp on last edited by
    #194

    @nzzp said in Wales v Australia:

    @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

    Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

    I saw what you saw by the sound of it - the defence splintered went around the back of the maul and then tackled the ball carrier while grotesquely offside.

    yet the ref just waved it on. Weird.

    Yeah that's how I saw it too, thought it should have been a penalty to Oz

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • barbarianB Offline
    barbarianB Offline
    barbarian
    replied to voodoo on last edited by
    #195

    @voodoo said in Wales v Australia:

    So in summary, yes, your rage was entitled!

    After 15 years on this site, finally I get the reinforcement I needed. Thank you. I can now die happy.

    G 1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • G Offline
    G Offline
    gibbon rib
    replied to barbarian on last edited by
    #196

    @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

    @voodoo said in Wales v Australia:

    So in summary, yes, your rage was entitled!

    After 15 years on this site, finally I get the reinforcement I needed. Thank you. I can now die happy righteously angry.

    FIFY

    1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • antipodeanA Online
    antipodeanA Online
    antipodean
    replied to barbarian on last edited by
    #197

    @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

    Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

    Clear penalty against Red 19 to me. Admittedly I had to watch a couple of times to find the culprit.

    NTAN 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • G Offline
    G Offline
    gibbon rib
    replied to Crucial on last edited by gibbon rib
    #198

    @crucial said in Wales v Australia:

    @booboo said in Wales v Australia:

    @tordah said in Wales v Australia:

    @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
    In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
    The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

    Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

    You would hope 100 out 100 would not penalise.

    There is no "negative intent". Stopping a pass legally is a very positive result for Wales.

    I think their is a bit of confusion here. IMO it was a negative action but tat was solely because he didn't look to be trying to knock it back,it was just fortuitous that he did. He was just sticking out a hand to stop the pass and it worked out.

    Having watched the replays far too many times, I've actually come to the conclusion that Tomkins deserves a bit more credit than just being the beneficiary of pure luck. His motion is more than just sticking his arm out, he actually moves his hand and fingers back as the ball arrives in an attempt to knock it backwards towards himself. And I think he knew it went backwards - he does slow down, but you can clearly see him saying "back" to the ref. (It's reasonable to ask why he slowed down at all, my guess is that he thought it had been called back because of of reactions of all the other players / 75k fans around him).

    So I think he was just very lucky, rather than incredibly lucky.

    Having said that, it's all irrelevant to the outcome, all that matters is whether the ball went forwards.

    1 Reply Last reply
    4
  • G Offline
    G Offline
    gibbon rib
    wrote on last edited by gibbon rib
    #199

    So of the last 15 matches between Wales and Australia, Australia won the first 12 and Wales the last 3.

    Only one has been decided by more than 9 points
    10 of them were by 7 points or fewer
    7 were by 3 points or fewer

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • NTAN Online
    NTAN Online
    NTA
    replied to antipodean on last edited by
    #200

    @antipodean said in Wales v Australia:

    @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

    Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

    Clear penalty against Red 19 to me. Admittedly I had to watch a couple of times to find the culprit.

    If that is still a maul, then penalty against Red 19 for changing his bind.

    If it is not a maul then it can't be a Red scrum feed because gold are going forward.

    IMHO it isn't a maul and is a bit messy TBH, so I think call the next breakdown a ruck and penalised about four red players for killing it. Yellow card, penalty gold 5m out.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • NepiaN Online
    NepiaN Online
    Nepia
    replied to gibbon rib on last edited by
    #201

    @gibbon-rib said in Wales v Australia:

    @tordah this is one of the more bizarre claims I've ever seen on a rugby site. That the ref should overrule the laws of the game and treat a legal knock-back as an illegal knock-on because if infringes some unwritten ethereal "spirit of the game".

    Balanced out by the fact refs have been overruling the laws of the game all season with their "interpretation" of the laws. They'll probably say it's for the flow of the game which is akin to the spirit of the game.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • DuluthD Offline
    DuluthD Offline
    Duluth
    wrote on last edited by
    #202

    Valetini cops ban for hit that left Adam Beard needing 20 stitches in face

    Valetini cops ban for hit that left Adam Beard needing 20 stitches in face

    World Rugby has slapped Wallabies back-rower Rob Valetini with a three-match suspension for his dangerous tackle on Welsh lock Adam Beard.

    StargazerS 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • StargazerS Offline
    StargazerS Offline
    Stargazer
    replied to Duluth on last edited by
    #203

    @duluth And that three-match ban will become a two-match ban ...

    The No.8 will miss the Brumbies’ Super Rugby Pacific trial matches against the NSW Waratahs on January 29 and the Brumbies’ development team the following week plus their competition opener against Moana Pasifika on February 18.

    But Valetini can opt to complete a Head Contact Process Coaching Intervention course to have his ban reduced to two matches.

    That avenue is available to offending players in the hope of modifying specific techniques and technical issues that contributed to the foul play.

    I hadn't realised that that option to complete a Head Contact Process Coaching Intervention replace one of the matches a player is suspended for, had been adopted for the November internationals. Is it part of the law trials, or is it an official rule now? I only remember it being trialled by the the U20s a few years ago.

    By the way, that a game of the Brumbies development team counts towards his suspension is ridiculous.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0

Wales v Australia
Rugby Matches
walesaustralia
  • Login

  • Don't have an account? Register

  • Login or register to search.
  • First post
    Last post
0
  • Categories
  • Login

  • Don't have an account? Register

  • Login or register to search.